FCC, Stephen Colbert and Jimmy Kimmel
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Stephen Colbert took a jab at his employer, CBS, for paying $16 million to settle a lawsuit with the Trump administration.
Colbert mocked Trump's new international peace body, which other Western nations have largely opposed, and threw a dig at his employer in the process
As The Late Show continues to mostly win out over the competition in the ratings, Stephen Colbert will be making the jump to NBC to visit Late Night with Seth Meyers for the first time in well over a decade. Fans can expect to see the two comedy stalwarts sharing the Late Night stage on Tuesday, January 27.
The late-night talk show host joked that the attack gave a clue about the Epstein files.
CBS News’ marquee morning and evening shows — including the network’s “Late Night with Stephen Colbert” — are heading for record-low ratings this month, The Post has learned. “CBS Evening News,” hosted by newly-minted anchor Tony Dokoupil,
Did Stephen Colbert "reveal" Donald Trump's "1970 Wharton IQ test"? No, that's not true: This claim and its variations originated from accounts that warned their audiences that they do not post factually accurate content.
Colbert taunted Trump FCC Chairman Brendan Carr by calling him a "disappointed testicle" and mocking his new "crackdown" on late-night television. The post Colbert Taunts Trump Honcho ‘And Disappointed Testicle’ Over New ‘Crackdown’ Threat first appeared on Mediaite.
Stephen Colbert called Donald Trump's billion-dollar entry fee for his Board of Peace "a little steep," noting his employer CBS got to "obey" the president for just $16 million. During the monologue for Thursday's broadcast of "The Late Show,
The ongoing feud between Colbert, 61, and Maher, who turned 70 on Tuesday, January 20, can be traced back to the Club Random podcast host's appearance on The Late Show in 2015. During the interview, Colbert, a devout Catholic, challenged an outspoken Maher on his atheism, which led to a tense conversation about religion.
Stephen Colbert used his late-night show to clap back at the new F.C.C. “crackdown rules” that his lawyers warned him “not to talk about.” “A new crackdown on late-night TV? That has enormous implications for me for four more months,
Stephen Colbert offered a swift response to President Trump's assertion in Davos, Switzerland Wednesday that "sometimes you need a dictator," telling America's commander-in-chief, "Nope!" "No one ever 'needs a dictator,